The crypto candidate â it has a nice ring to it.
And Brian Forde, former head of MITâs Digital Currency Initiative, is making that his new title. The author of the White House memo on bitcoin during the Obama administration, Forde is looking to take his interest in cryptocurrency and blockchain technology to higher office â Californiaâs 45th District seat in the U.S. House of Representatives, to be exact.
Forde said during the Ethereal Summit in Queens, NY, on May 12 that he is running for office on a platform of bridging the gap between Congress and the crypto community. He first announced his campaign last July and is seeking to unseat incumbent Rep. Mimi Walters.
First and foremost, Fordeâs campaign accepts cryptocurrency donations â a rare move among candidates for national office but nothing new.
But whatâs particularly notable about Fordeâs mission is how he plans to use the technology â if elected â to help his constituents get their voices heard by recording their policy preferences on a blockchain.
Speaking to CoinDesk in a separate interview, Forde explained the rationale behind this plan.
âIf youâre upset at your member of Congress, you call them, you fax them, you text them, you email them, and in theory, thereâs someone in the background, some intern â kind of chicken scratches on the wall â counting how people feel. Is that publicly auditable? No,â he told CoinDesk, adding:
âIâd be the first member of Congress to adopt blockchain voting to hear from my constituents about how they feel on the policies Iâm about to vote on.â
Forde wouldnât necessarily hold himself to his constituentsâ decisions. But he said Saturday that âwhat I want to do is create transparency for the voice of the citizen, so that if I do make a decision thatâs not consistent with what all the votes said, then Iâve got to explain myself.â
But whatâs perhaps more beneficial â especially to the tech-savvy blockchain community â is that Forde would be a knowledgeable representative that could communicate the industryâs mission to sitting members of Congress.
Few people in Congress are technologically adept, Forde contended, a fact that was âclearly on displayâ during Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerbergâs testimony after the social media giantâs recent scandal whereby third-party companies were collecting userâs private data.
This lack of understanding threatens to stifle innovation, Forde said â or push it out of the country entirely.
At a recent meeting with blockchain and cryptocurrency entrepreneurs in his district, he learned âtheir biggest fear is that theyâre not going to be able to start or run their companies here in the United States because the regulatory structure is very uncertain today.â
Not that the politicians deserve all the blame. When he worked at the White House, he said, âyou had policymakers who didnât understand technology and you had technologists who didnât understand policy.â
His role, Forde said, was to be a âhelpful ambassador.â
A few years on, he sees similar communication breakdowns everywhere he looks. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) have divergent approaches, he said. Meanwhile, states are passing their own laws, not all of them helpful â New Yorkâs Bitlicense, he pointed out, caused businesses to leave the state.
âPeople in the various areasâ â business, technology, government â âarenât speaking the same language, and so theyâre talking past each other,â he said. He offered this example:
âWhen people say âblockchain not bitcoin,â I head for the hills, man.â
Image by CoinDesk